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University of New Mexico

CONTACT INFORMATION:

University of New Mexico
Official Web Site: http://www.unm.edu/~jar

Lawrence Guy Straus, Editor
Journal of Anthropological Research
Department of Anthropology
MSC01 1040
University of New Mexico
Albuquerque, NM 87131-0001

Editor : (505) 277-6688
Business Office: (505) 277-4544
Fax: (505) 277-0874
Email: jar45@unm.edu

The University of New Mexico (UNM) is the flagship institution of higher learning in New Mexico and is classified as a "Research" University. The main campus in Albuquerque has over 25,000 students. UNM has long been known for its Anthropology, which is in keeping with New Mexico's wealth and diversity of archaeological sites, living cultures, and languages. Founded in 1928 by Edgar Lee Hewett, the Anthropology Department has about thirty faculty members, specializing and teaching in all the major subfields of anthropology and doing research around the world. Its numerous students are also very active in many aspects of archaeology, ethnology, biological and linguistic anthropology, and evolutionary ecology. The Editor and Editorial Board of Journal of Anthropological Research are faculty members of the UNM Anthropology Department, while Associate Editors are distinguished anthropologists at other institutions.

JOURNALS INCLUDED IN JSTOR:

Journal of Anthropological Research
(continues Southwestern Journal of Anthropology)
The Journal of Anthropological Research is published quarterly by the University of New Mexico in the interest of general anthropology. It was founded by Leslie Spier in 1945 as the Southwestern Journal of Anthropology. JAR publishes substantive, peer-reviewed research articles and book reviews in all subfields of anthropology, totaling approximately six hundred pages of text annually. It sponsors and publishes the JAR Distinguished Lectures by leading scholars in the discipline. JAR is an independent, non-profit medium for the dissemination of significant, theoretically informed, broadly contextualized research results of interest to the international profession of anthropology. It has over one thousand subscribers worldwide. Institutions may receive JAR electronically for a modest fee in addition to the hard-copy subscription.

Journal description provided by the University of New Mexico.

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